Loud Keith J, Micheli Lyle J, Bristol Stephanie, Austin S Bryn, Gordon Catherine M
Division of Adolescent Medicine, Children's Hospital Medical Center, Akron, Ohio, USA.
Pediatrics. 2007 Aug;120(2):e364-72. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-2145. Epub 2007 Jul 16.
Increased physical activity and menstrual irregularity have been associated with increased risk for stress fracture among adult women active in athletics. The purposes of this study were to determine whether menstrual irregularity is also a risk factor for stress fracture in active female adolescents and to estimate the quantity of exercise associated with an increased risk for this injury.
A case-control study was conducted of 13- to 22-year-old females diagnosed with their first stress fracture, each matched prospectively on age and self-reported ethnicity with 2 controls. Patients with chronic illnesses or use of medications known to affect bone mineral density were excluded, including use of hormonal preparations that could alter menstrual cycles. The primary outcome, stress fracture in any extremity or the spine, was confirmed radiographically. Girls with stress fracture had bone mineral density measured at the lumbar spine by dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry.
The mean +/- SD age of the 168 participants was 15.9 +/- 2.1 years; 91.7% were postmenarchal, with a mean age at menarche of 13.1 +/- 1.1 years. The prevalence of menstrual irregularity was similar among cases and controls. There was no significant difference in the mean hours per week of total physical activity between girls in this sample with stress fracture (8.2 hours/week) and those without (7.4 hours/week). In multivariate models, case subjects had nearly 3 times the odds of having a family member with osteoporosis or osteopenia. In secondary analyses, participants with stress fracture had a low mean spinal bone mineral density for their age.
Among highly active female adolescents, only family history was independently associated with stress fracture. The magnitude of this association suggests that further investigations of inheritable skeletal factors are warranted in this population, along with evaluation of bone mineral density in girls with stress fracture.
在成年女性运动员中,体力活动增加和月经不规律与应力性骨折风险增加有关。本研究的目的是确定月经不规律是否也是活跃的女性青少年应力性骨折的危险因素,并估计与该损伤风险增加相关的运动量。
对13至22岁首次诊断为应力性骨折的女性进行病例对照研究,每名患者前瞻性地按年龄和自我报告的种族与2名对照进行匹配。排除患有慢性疾病或使用已知会影响骨矿物质密度的药物的患者,包括使用可能改变月经周期的激素制剂。主要结局为任何肢体或脊柱的应力性骨折,通过X线摄影确认。患有应力性骨折的女孩通过双能X线吸收法测量腰椎的骨矿物质密度。
168名参与者的平均年龄±标准差为15.9±2.1岁;91.7%已初潮,初潮平均年龄为13.1±1.1岁。病例组和对照组月经不规律的患病率相似。该样本中患有应力性骨折的女孩(8.2小时/周)与未患应力性骨折的女孩(7.4小时/周)每周总体力活动的平均小时数无显著差异。在多变量模型中,病例组有骨质疏松或骨质减少家族成员的几率几乎是对照组的3倍。在二次分析中,患有应力性骨折的参与者按年龄计算的平均脊柱骨矿物质密度较低。
在高度活跃的女性青少年中,只有家族史与应力性骨折独立相关。这种关联的程度表明,有必要对该人群中可遗传的骨骼因素进行进一步研究,并对患有应力性骨折的女孩的骨矿物质密度进行评估。